Lead Opinion
In this appeal, we are asked to review an order of the district court holding unconstitutional a New Jersey statute and court rule, both now repealed, that assessed higher filing fees in matrimonial actions than in other civil cases. Unlike the district court, we conclude that the Constitution of the United States was not violated by the State’s imposition of a “trial fee” upon individuals seeking divorces, but not upon other civil litigants. Whatever the wisdom of New Jersey’s legislation, in our view the classification at issue here neither contravened a fundamental interest, so as to trigger heightened scrutiny, nor constituted an act devoid of rationality, so as to fall short of the minimal requirements for orderly government. Accordingly, we reverse.
I
On June 18, 1979, plaintiff Donna Murillo, a resident of New Jersey, filed for a divorce in New Jersey Superior Court and paid the sixty-dollar filing fee required of all complainants in that court. Because hers was a matrimonial action, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-16 and N.J. Court Rule 4:79-2 applied.
After certifying the case as a class action, the district court, at the suggestion of the State, stayed further proceedings in order to provide the New Jersey Legislature with an opportunity to review the matrimonial fee arrangement. So that the resulting delay would not prejudice the plaintiffs, however, the court ordered defendant W. Lewis Bambrick, Clerk of the Superior Court of New Jersey, to deposit all such fees collected after September 6, 1979, in a separate interest-bearing account. On August 1, 1980, the Legislature repealed N.J.S.A. 2A:34-16, effective September 1, 1980,
Following the Legislature’s action, the district court reopened the case and, after a two-day trial, concluded that the divorce trial-fee arrangement violated the equal protection clause. Murillo v. Bambrick,
II
Although the underlying dispute in this appeal may appear to involve a narrow and relatively unimportant statute, since repealed, we believe that the district court’s decision raises important questions about the nature of judicial review under the equal protection clause. It is appropriate, therefore, to commence our analysis with a consideration of general principles.
In large part, legislative acts classify; by their very nature, they draw distinctions between groups of individuals and among various forms of human endeavor.
The fourteenth amendment, in providing that no state shall “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,” has been construed to set out such a standard. This “equal protection clause” has never been interpreted so as to strike down all legislative efforts that do not apply “to all persons at all times and in all places,” Trimble v. Gordon,
A
Given this backdrop, we first consider the matter of the appropriate standard of equal protection review applicable to the controversy before us today. The district court concluded that, “in this case, no suspect class or fundamental interest is present,” and that therefore the rational basis test was applicable.
The fundamental rights component of the equal protection clause can be traced to Skinner v. Oklahoma,
No decision of the Supreme Court stands squarely for the proposition that state restrictions on divorce must be evaluated under the same exacting standards as restrictions on, for example, the right to travel, the right to vote, or the right to
Whatever the merits of this argument,
An additional consideration might be present if it were demonstrated that the fee arrangement discouraged indigents from obtaining a divorce by imposing a financial requirement that they would find impossible to satisfy. Such is not the case here: the statute in question contained an explicit exemption for persons unable to afford the fee.
Finally, it might be maintained that New Jersey trespassed upon its citizens’ fundamental right to divorce — assuming, once again, that such' a right exists — by imposing the supplemental trial fee on matrimonial litigants, but not on other civil litigants. This contention suffers from a logical flaw, however. A divorce action and, for example, a tort or contract action, obviously are not interchangeable alternatives. The higher cost for a divorce, as opposed to other civil actions, would hardly encourage those seeking a divorce to abandon their efforts in favor of other, less expensive forms of litigation. The level of the fee charged for, say, a tort action, therefore, is irrelevant to the presence of any burden on the right to obtain a divorce.
Accordingly, we hold that the statute under attack in this proceeding need not be evaluated under the heightened standard appropriate for legislation that infringes on fundamental constitutional rights. We proceed, therefore, as did the district court, to assess the constitutionality of the legislation under the “rational relation” standard of equal protection review.
B
Having determined that New Jersey’s statute poses no interference with a fundamental right sufficient to invoke rigorous scrutiny, the rational basis test becomes, in our view, the appropriate standard by which to measure the legislation for purposes of plaintiffs’ equal protection challenge. See Schweiker v. Wilson,
The first task of a court in evaluating an equal protection claim under the rational relation test is to identify with particularity the precise classification alleged to be irrational. Obviously, it would constitute an irrational act — and hence would offend the Constitution’s promise of “equal protection of the laws” — were a state to impose differing burdens upon individuals who are, in all relevant respects, indistinguishable.
After reviewing the record in this case, we are persuaded that the New Jersey Legislature did not proceed irrationally, both when it instituted the divorce fee arrangement, and when it retained that arrangement over the course of a number of decades. In light of the evidence available to it, we believe it would not have been unreasonable for the Legislature to have been of the opinion that the State’s divorce system imposed financial as well as non-financial demands upon the judiciary, thereby justifying additional monetary support from the users of that system. In this connection, it is instructive to consider the origins of the supplemental fee and the place of that fee in the overall framework of New Jersey’s divorce-related legislation.
For nearly the entire first half of this century, all divorce actions filed in New Jersey were referred for initial review to special masters. These masters were
[sjince the State had an interest in preventing divorces on grounds other than [adultery, desertion, and extreme cruelty], it considered itself a party, albeit not in name, to every suit for divorce. The State was omnipresent, standing over the shoulders of the litigants — in the body of the advisory master — to prevent collusive divorces.
In 1948, the New Jersey Legislature abolished the mastership system and, at the same time, formally adopted the divorce fees at issue on this appeal. Before their cases would be set for trial, matrimonial litigants were obligated to remit fifty dollars “for the use of the state,” and an additional ten dollar fee for stenographic services was imposed in “litigated” actions. No official explanation accompanied this enactment. Consequently, as the district court observed, “the exact purpose of the legislature in 1948 is now enshrouded in the mists of time.”
the legislature intended that, as the system of advisory masters was abolished, the existing judicial structure would be required to perform tasks previously executed by the masters. The fee system created by the newly-enacted statute would institutionalize financial support for a category of cases requiring closer judicial scrutiny and a greater allocation of court resources.
Id. Even though special masters were no longer employed in divorce proceedings, the fifty-dollar trial fee could be explained, according to the district court, by reason of New Jersey’s continuing interest in the oversight of all divorce suits. In short, “the 1948 statute represented a change only in procedure [and] not in substantive state policy.” Id. The plaintiffs apparently agree with the district court’s conclusion in this regard: in no way do they imply that the State’s trial fee arrangement was somehow irrational or unconstitutional prior to 1971.
New Jersey’s substantive law of divorce remained unchanged until 1971. In that year the Legislature amended the Divorce Act in order to give effect to a number of “no-fault” reforms.
The district court concluded that a “dramatic change” was wrought in New
Because the Legislature has not been shown to have acted irrationally when it permitted the divorce fee arrangement to remain on the books at the time it amended the Divorce Act, we turn to a final consideration; whether that arrangement somehow “became” irrational by reason of subsequent events. In this regard, the district judge concluded that, in 1979 when this suit was filed, the matrimonial fee system could no longer be justified:
If it were true that prior to New Jersey’s institution of no-fault divorce, matrimonial cases took up more of a judge’s time than other types of cases, it is readily apparent that this is no longer the case.... The majority of all divorce cases are now uncontested, and plaintiffs in such cases are rarely before the judge for more than a few moments. Although a minority of actions, filed on the basis of fault, may still require special judicial scrutiny, most matrimonial litigants require no extraordinary judicial supervision. Indeed, it was demonstrated at trial that the average cost of disposing of a matrimonial case was significantly less than the average cost of adjudicating other civil actions.
We find this aspect of the district court’s analysis troubling on two grounds. First, primarily for the reasons discussed previously, we do not believe that New Jersey’s divorce fee arrangement could be considered irrational simply because “the average cost of disposing of a matrimonial case was significantly less than the average cost of adjudicating other civil actions,”
Second, even were we persuaded that the divorce fee arrangement could not be justified as long as divorce cases in fact are less costly than other civil matters, we could not accept the district court’s application of this principle to the facts of the present appeal. By concluding, in effect, that New Jersey’s Legislature acted unconstitutionally when it retained in existence a statute admittedly valid when enacted but arguably grounded on assumptions that eventually turned out to have been incorrect, the district court imposed an unwarranted obligation upon legislative bodies: the obligation constantly to reassess the continuing validity of the factual premises underlying each piece of legislation enacted over the years. Only through such a painstaking effort, apparently, could New Jersey have discovered the alleged error that developed and corrected it, thereby foreclosing the possibility of judicial intervention and invalidation.
In our view, however, just as the Constitution neither demands nor expects perfection on the part of a legislature engaged in adopting laws that classify,
Based on the record in this appeal, we conclude that the New Jersey Legislature did not act unreasonably under the circumstances described. Specifically, once the Legislature concluded that its original assumption about the relative impact of divorce litigation was no longer applicable, it did exactly what the plaintiffs sought in this lawsuit: it repealed the trial fee statute.
In short, because a rational reason can be identified for the institution and the retention of New Jersey’s supplemental divorce fee — namely, the need for reimbursement of a portion of the expenses incurred by the State in providing divorce-related services
Ill
Early in the last century, Chief Justice Marshall set forth his now-classic exposition of the appropriate role assigned to the courts in our constitutional scheme when state statutes are challenged. He declared that
whether a law be void for its repugnancy to the constitution, is, at all times, a question of much delicacy, which ought seldom, if ever, to be decided in the affirmative, in a doubtful case.. .. [I]t is not on slight implication and vague conjecture, that the legislature is to be pronounced to have transcended its powers, and its acts to be considered as void. The opposition between the constitution and the law should be such that the judge feels a clear and strong conviction of their incompatability with each other.
Fletcher v. Peck,
Notes
. N.J.S.A. 2A:34-16 (West) (repealed 1980) provided that
[e]xcept in actions in forma pauperis, before any matrimonial action is approved for trial the plaintiff or counterclaimant shall pay to the clerk of the superior court, for the use of the state, the sum of $50 and in litigated actions the additional sum of $10. N.J. Court Rule 4:79-2 (deleted 1980) elaborated upon this statutory requirement:
Except as otherwise provided by R[ule] 1:13-2 [relating to actions brought by indigents], before any matrimonial action is approved for trial the plaintiff or counterclaim-ant shall deposit with the clerk the sum of $50 and in litigated actions the additional sum of $10 for stenographic fee. The aforesaid fees together with the request for approval for trial of the matrimonial action shall be forwarded to the clerk within 30 days of the entry of default or the service of a pleading contesting the action.
. 1980 N.J.Sess.Law Serv., ch. 80, § 4. The Legislature simultaneously raised the general filing fee for all civil actions from $60 to $75, in order “to adjust for the elimination of the matrimonial fees and to compensate for inflationary pressures.” Id at 271.
. See Tussman & tenBroek, The Equal Protection of the Laws, 37 Cal.L.Rev. 341, 343-44 (1949); see also Martin v. Struthers,
, On occasion, the Supreme Court has employed an “intermediate” standard of equal protection review. Under this “middle-tiered” approach, laws that classify on the basis of certain specified, but non-suspect, characteristics — such as sex, alienage, and illegitimacy— will be accepted if substantially related to important state objectives. See, e.g., Craig v. Boren,
. In briefs filed with this Court, neither party challenged the district court’s determination in this regard. At oral argument, however, counsel for appellee suggested that New Jersey’s legislation interfered with Murillo’s fundamental right “to be married and to end a marriage.”
. See Illinois Elections Bd. v. Socialist Workers Party,
. See Developments in the Law: The Constitution and the Family, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1156, 1308-13 (1980) (observing that “[t]he Supreme Court has not recognized a substantive constitutional right to divorce,” but recommending that divorce be given “greater protection than offered by the [Sosna v. Iowa] rational basis test”); see also Strickman, Marriage, Divorce and the Constitution, 22 B.C.L.Rev. 935, 978-1008 (1981).
. Support for such an argument focuses upon Boddie v. Connecticut,
. It could be argued that the Boddie-Kras-Za-blocki line of cases does not stand for the proposition that divorce is a fundamental right. Although Boddie recognized that marriage was an important relationship, the Court, in holding that a state violated due process by denying court access to indigents unable to pay divorce filing fees, did not explicitly recognize a fundamental right to marry, much less a fundamental right to divorce. Similarly, while Kras might be read to support the proposition that the imposition of an absolute bar to the judicial process for the dissolution of a marriage is incompatible with the demands of the due process clause, the opinion need not be interpreted as establishing the fundamental nature of divorce for equal protection purposes. See Developments in the Law, supra note 7, at 1310. Under Zablocki, to be sure, the right to marry is elevated to a “fundamental” status; the Za-blocki opinion is silent, however, as to the presence of a fundamental right to divorce.
Indeed, this counterargument continues, it is difficult to reconcile the notion that divorce laws should be subjected to heightened scrutiny with the Supreme Court’s decision in Sosna v. Iowa,
Finally, it could be maintained that recognition of a fundamental right to divorce is not necessary to protect the fundamental right to marry. Under Zablocki, any regulation that “significantly” or “directly or substantially” interferes with decisions to remarry will be upheld only if “supported by sufficiently important state interests and ... closely tailored to effectuate only those interests.”
. According to statistics produced by the State at trial, see Defendant’s Trial Exhibit D-l, and credited by the district court, see
. Cf. Harris v. McRae,
. See N.J.S.A. 2A:34-16 (repealed 1980). It is the presence of this exemption for indigents that distinguishes New Jersey’s statute from the filing fee arrangement invalidated by the Supreme Court in Boddie v. Connecticut,
. At the time Murillo instituted these proceedings, “she earned twenty-five to twenty-eight dollars per day as a domestic, and did not qualify as an indigent.”
. A different situation might be presented if a state were subsidizing at uneven rates two alternatives where the choice between -those alternatives was constitutionally protected. Even were that the case here, however, it is not clear that the State would be deemed to have infringed on the right to make that choice. See Harris v. McRae,
. The deference accorded legislators under the rational basis test was perhaps most strongly stated in McGowan v. Maryland,
In recent decisions, the Supreme Court has demonstrated some uncertainty as to the precise nature of rational relation review. While some Justices, following Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
. For example, it would be difficult to defend as “rational” a state statute that extracted a $50 divorce fee from individuals with surnames beginning with A to M, but collected only $20 from persons whose names begin with N to Z — at least in the absence of any information that might reasonably distinguish members of the first group from members of the second with respect to matters of divorce.
. In addition to the three existing “fault” grounds for divorce — adultery, desertion, and extreme cruelty (the latter two of which were revamped) — certain “no-fault” justifications were recognized under the amended Act: an eighteen-month separation; a twelve-month narcotic or alcoholic addiction; a twenty-four-month institutionalization; and an eighteen-month imprisonment. Additionally, a fourth “fault” provision was adopted (deviant sexual conduct), a number of common-law defenses to divorce were abolished (recrimination, condo-nation, and clean hands), and various revisions were made involving alimony, nullification, child legitimation, and the distribution of marital property. See N.J.S.A. 2A:34-1 to 34-7; Note, The 1971 New Jersey Divorce Law, 25 Rutgers L.Rev. 476, 479 (1971); see also Sko-loff, The Divorce Reform Law: A Brief Review, N.J.L.J., Aug. 5, 1971, at 1.
. Counsel for the State argues that the district court’s characterization of the 1971 amendments is open to serious challenge. While the Legislature did indeed modify a number of the ground rules for divorce, counsel suggests that the State’s paramount interest in and responsibility for matrimonial matters remained unchanged. The State, for example, specifically did not “abandon” its obligation to prevent collusive divorces; on the contrary, despite the recommendation of the Divorce Law Study Commission, the Legislature retained the defenses of laches, connivance, and collusion. See Note, The 1971 New Jersey Divorce Law, supra note 17, at 495-96 & n.121 (discussing N.J.S.A. 2A:34-7 as amended). Neither did the Legislature mean to suggest, as subsequent State court cases made clear, that the judiciary’s only appropriate function was to rubber-stamp the applications of individuals seeking dissolution of their marital bonds. See Rothman v. Rothman,
. The district court condemned the trial fee arrangement on the basis of actual events that transpired after 1971 — events which demonstrated, in the district court’s view, that “the State’s belief that it was collecting these fees to defray the higher cost of providing judicial services to matrimonial litigants was [in fact] false.”
. It is not significant for purposes of our determination today that there exists no legislative history indicating why the 1971 Legislature retained the divorce fee arrangement. While such commentary would of course be helpful were it available, see Schweiker v. Wilson,
In this connection, it is worth noting that the district court’s requirement that the State iden
. It should be stressed that, in any equal protection action evaluated under the rational relation test, “ ‘those challenging the legislative judgment must convince the court that the legislative facts on which the classification is apparently based could not reasonably be conceived to be true by the governmental decision-maker.’ ” Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
The district court’s protestation that the State “failed adequately to explain why matrimonial litigants alone had been singled out” when other groups of litigants — such as “[c]lass actions, actions involving minors and incompetents, [and] probate and adoption matters” — require extra judicial scrutiny,
. The Supreme Court on a number of occasions has rejected an equal protection challenge to a statute that imposed fees on the users of a specific judicial service. See, e.g., United States v. Kras,
. Whereas divorce fees provided 53% of the costs of operating the matrimonial trial system, see note 10 supra, litigants accounted for 30% ($4.90 million in revenues out of $16.41 million in costs) of the monies spent by the State in providing courts to adjudicate general civil law and equity matters.
. Even in the event of this latter showing — i.e., if it could be established that New Jersey used monies derived from divorce litigants in order to fund other, unrelated activities, such as highway maintenance — the State might still be able to defend its statute against a constitutional attack by arguing that, what it has denominated to be a “fee,” in actuality is a “tax” designed to raise general revenue. In
. See Western & Southern Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization of Cal.,
. Plaintiffs — in addition to the district judge,
. In this connection, counsel for the State argues that the district court misapplied equal protection doctrines by focusing on the actual workings of a statute at the time of trial, as opposed to the intended and foreseeable consequences at the time of its enactment. We find it unnecessary to appraise this contention. We note, however, that the Supreme Court appears not to have determined definitively whether changed conditions are a relevant consideration in equal protection analysis. Compare Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
. The district court,
. Our analysis and holding with respect to the $50 trial fee apply equally to the $10 assessment for stenographic services collected by the State in contested divorce actions.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment of the district court that the fees held in escrow by defendant be refunded with interest to the individuals who had deposited them because I believe that the statute pursuant to which they were collected violates the Equal Protection Clause.
The district court concluded that New Jersey’s matrimonial fee system neither employed any suspect classification nor impinged on any fundamental right, and therefore it used the rational basis standard in its constitutional analysis. Murillo v. Bambrick,
In Boddie v. Connecticut,
The due process problem involved in Bod-die is not presented by N.J.StatAnn.
The denial of access to the judicial forum in Boddie touched directly, as has been noted, on the marital relationship and on the associational interests that surround the establishment and dissolution of that relationship. On many occasions we have recognized the fundamental importance of these interests under our Constitution.... [In contrast,] [w]e see no fundamental interest that is gained or lost depending on the availability of discharge in bankruptcy.
... Bankruptcy is hardly akin to free speech or marriage or to those other rights, so many of which are imbedded in the First Amendment, that the Court has come to regard as fundamental and that demand the lofty requirement of a compelling governmental interest before they may be significantly regulated.... This being so, the applicable standard ... is that of rational justification.
409 U.S. at 44A-46,
Most recently, in Zablocki v. Redhail,
In light of this line of precedent, the reluctance of the majority to recognize the existence of a fundamental right to divorce is inexplicable. It is even more perplexing because the majority concedes the proposition that the right to marry is fundamental. It gives no cogent reason for differentiating between the right to marry and the right to divorce. See Majority op. at 903 n.9. Both logic and practicality require that marriage and divorce be considered correlative. See Developments in the Law: The Constitution and the Family, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1156, 1311 (1980). In no state in this country can one marry if a previous marriage to someone still living has not been dissolved by divorce or annulment. Presumably the majority would agree that the right to marry is not limited to the right to marry only once. Furthermore, even married persons who do not wish to remarry have a fundamental right to resume single-hood.
Because the right to marry inheres in the right to privacy, and the Court has recognized that “it would make little sense” to recognize a right of privacy with respect to
Zabloeki teaches not only that the right to marry and divorce are to be considered as fundamental rights for purposes of equal protection analysis, but also that a heightened scrutiny is appropriate even when the statutory classification does not absolutely prevent either marriage or divorce. The Court noted that there were “[m]any [persons], able in theory to satisfy the statute’s requirements, [who] will be sufficiently burdened by having to do so that they will in effect be coerced into forgoing their right to marry.”
In Dunn v. Blumstein,
Of course, it is true that the two individual interests affected by Tennessee’s dura-tional residence requirements are affected in different ways. Travel is permitted, but only at a price; voting is prohibited. The right to travel is merely penalized, while.the right to vote is absolutely denied. But these differences are irrelevant for present purposes. Shapiro [v. Thompson,394 U.S. 618 ,89 S.Ct. 1322 ,22 L.Ed.2d 600 (1969)] implicitly realized what this Court has made explicit elsewhere:
“It has long been established that a State may not impose a penalty upon those who exercise a right guaranteed by the Constitution.... ”
Id. at 341,
Of course, not every classification which may affect the marital relationship in any way warrants strict scrutiny. For example, in Califano v. Jobst,
The majority in this case adroitly sidesteps deciding whether the New Jersey statute trenched upon a fundamental interest by concluding the statute “did not ‘significantly’ or ‘directly or substantially’ infringe upon the right of individuals to obtain dissolutions of their marriages.” Majority op. at 903. The majority reaches its conclusion in the face of the contrary findings of the district court. That court found that although Murillo did not qualify as an indigent, at the time that she initiated these proceedings she was working as a domestic and earning $25.00 to $28.00 per day. The district court concluded that “[t]he State of New Jersey had thus placed plaintiff in a dilemma: either she would have had to pay what was to her a substantial sum to sue for divorce; or she would have remained hostage to a marriage which under the substantive law of the State she was entitled to have dissolved.”
Turning then to the question whether the classification can withstand such heightened scrutiny, it is necessary to consider whether the statutory classification “is supported by sufficiently important state interests and is closely tailored to effectuate only those interests. See, e.g., Carey v. Population Services International,
In Sosna v. Iowa,
In this case the State has not always posited the legislative objective behind the special matrimonial fee with either clarity or consistency. New Jersey originally sought to justify the fee on the basis of the following factors listed in its Answers to Interrogatories:
A. Judge’s time spent on matrimonial eases, including the fact that all matrimonial cases require bench time.
B. Additional time spent by the Clerk of the Superior Court’s office including verification of an Answer, verification to see if default properly entered, and verification of the service upon the defendant.
C. Additional post-judgment time spent on matrimonial vs. other cases.
D. Trial fee encourages reflective thought.
According to the State itself, at trial “the first three contentions were withdrawn” but “the fourth was maintained in a somewhat modified form, with the State arguing that the additional fees would serve the State public policy of not encouraging divorces.” Brief on Behalf of Defendant-Appellant at 7-8. On appeal the State shifted its position and, at least as now reformulated by the majority, the rationale posited for the special matrimonial fee is that “it would not have been unreasonable for the Legislature to have been of the opinion that the State’s divorce system made financial as well as non-financial demands upon the judiciary, thereby justifying additional monetary support from the users of that system”. Majority op. at 906.
The district court summarized the State’s contention as “that the matrimonial fees provided a means of supporting the additional court costs required to give divorce cases the high degree of scrutiny required under New Jersey law.”
Although a minority of actions, filed on the basis of fault, may still require special judicial scrutiny, most matrimonial litigants require no extraordinary judicial supervision. Indeed, it was demonstrated at trial that the average cost of disposing of a matrimonial case was significantly less than the average cost of adjudicating other civil actions.
As I understand the State’s contention on appeal, it is that it is irrelevant whether in fact matrimonial cases “require additional monies to operate in conformity with state law” because under the rational basis standard it is sufficient if the legislature may have reasonably, albeit erroneously, thought they did or predicted they would. The majority appears to have accepted this position. I need not comment on whether the majority has appropriately applied the rational basis standard, because I believe it is evident that the statutory classification cannot stand under the heightened scrutiny which I would apply. If the statute is not “closely tailored to effectuate only [the important state] interests,” then it cannot be sustained. The matrimonial fees cannot be necessary or “closely tailored” to defray the higher costs of divorce actions when, as a factual matter, those higher costs do not exist. Moreover, there is some question whether burdens on fundamental rights can be defended on financial grounds alone. See Shapiro v. Thompson,
The majority, in attempting to support its position that the special divorce fee does not “significantly” or “directly or substantially” infringe upon the right to divorce, has made arguments which appear to be directed to whether that fee, even if it imposes a burden, can be justified. Thus, for example, the majority mischaracterizes the challenge to the fee as, in effect, a claim that the State must provide a “free divorce.” Murillo does not claim that she is entitled to a free divorce, but only that her exercise of her right to a divorce should not be penalized by imposing upon her a fee
Because a fee for filing divorce actions directly affected the exercise of a fundamental interest, the statute must withstand heightened scrutiny, not the inadequate level of scrutiny used by the majority. Using what I believe is the correct level of scrutiny, the classification must fall.
. The majority suggests that Sosna may be read as support for the proposition that divorce does not implicate any fundamental right. Majority op. at 903 n.9. Sosna, however, never addressed the issue. Any inference to be drawn from Sosna respecting the right to divorce would seem to apply equally to the right to interstate travel, also at issue in that case, which the Supreme Court has repeatedly held to be fundamental.
. The State’s suggestion that because this is an equal protection case, the trial court must consider any conceivable rationale, whether or not it was raised, and that we in turn have an obligation to consider the State’s contentions, whether or not raised below, is at variance with our oft-stated view that we will ordinarily not consider issues on appeal that were not presented to the trial court. See, e.g., Newark Morning Ledger Co. v. United States,
. The majority does not reach the State’s contention that the matrimonial fee “encourages reflective thought” and thereby serves the State’s interest in “not encouraging divorce”. The trial court found that since the enactment of no-fault divorce in 1971, the purpose to discourage divorces has not existed. Subsequent statutory enactments may show abandonment of a prior legislative purpose. Eisenstadt v. Baird,
. According to the legislative statement which accompanied the repealer of the fee,
These proposed amendments to the New Jersey court fee system would serve two purposes. First, they would eliminate the approval fee required in matrimonial cases before the Superior Court — currently, these fees are $50.00 in uncontested cases and $60.00 in contested cases. Secondly, this legislation would increase the general fee for the filing of all civil complaints from $60.00 to $75.00.
In the past, the $50.00 or $60.00 differential required for matrimonial cases was justified by an additional review provided in such cases by a standing master who determined whether or not the matter was fít for trial. Today, no similar review exists to justify any such differential in fees. As a result, these approval fees for matrimonial cases have been questioned as an unreasonable classification in an action pending before the Federal district court. The elimination of these fees would thus serve to eliminate an anachronism from the court’s fee structure.
The simultaneous increase in the general filing fee for all civil complaints, from $60.00 to $75.00, is a necessary increase in court revenues to adjust for the elimination of the matrimonial fees and to compensate for inflationary pressures.
1980 N.J.Sess.Law Serv., ch. 80, at 271 (emphasis added). I see no reason why the majority’s hypothetical rationale for the special matrimonial fee should be preferred over that given by the legislature itself.
. I cannot avoid noting that the district court has indicated that it would have originally granted an injunction to enjoin collection of the fee had it decided the case when it was first presented because it believed the matrimonial fee was unconstitutional. Transcript of Sept. 10, 1980, at 111. Had it done so, the fund at issue in this case would not have accumulated. It carne into being only because the district court stayed proceedings in order to give the New Jersey Legislature an opportunity to resolve the matter of the matrimonial fee. The district court noted its unhappiness with the action of the New Jersey Legislature which made its abolition of the matrimonial fee prospective only and made no provision for the return of the already collected fees held in escrow pursuant to the district court order. Id at 111-12. Since this fund was created only because of the delay of action by the New Jersey Legislature, it is ironic that it should be permitted by this decision to profit by that very delay.
